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Secretive Gecko Actually 4 Separate Species

The West African forest gecko, Hemidactylus fasciatus, is secretive but common in the tropical rain forest patches stretching nearly 3,000 miles (4,800 kilometers) from the coast of Sierra Leone to the Congo. Two post-docs -- former UC Berkeley students -- have now determined that the gecko is at least four distinct species scattered through isolated patches of forest across West Africa.
(Image credit: Charles Linkem)

A secretive gecko that hides out in forest patches in West Africa is actually four distinct species, which evolved over the past 100,000 years due to fragmentation of their tropical rain forest homes, a new study suggests.

The West African forest gecko, which is about 6 inches long (15 centimeters), lives in rain forest patches from Ghana to Congo.

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